Ep. 203 - Luring Ohio 'Squatches with Moth Bait! - podcast episode cover

Ep. 203 - Luring Ohio 'Squatches with Moth Bait!

Mar 27, 20231 hr 1 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

Cliff Barackman and James "Bobo" Fay speak with Ohio-based lepidopterist Greg Stanko! Greg had a fascinating experience with two sasquatches that seemed to be attracted to his moth bait, and is here to tell us all about it!

Get weekly episodes of our bonus podcast "Beyond Bigfoot & Beyond" here: https://www.patreon.com/bigfootandbeyondpodcast

Order official "Bigfoot & Beyond with Cliff & Bobo" swag here: https://sasquatchprints.com/bigfoot-and-beyond-merch/

Transcript

Big food and be on with Cliff and Bobo. These guys are your favorites, So like Shy, subscribe and read it time starch meday, listening, watching, always, keep it squatching and now your hosts Cliff Berkman and James bobbo Fay. Good morning, Bobo. How are you doing today? Oh? Good Cliff, how are you doing. I'm a little tired, but I'm doing all right. I'm a little tired too, but um, yeah, I'm doing okay, I'm doing okay, just watching it snow again.

Um, I don't know, Bob's is it stone down there? Yeah, I'm not on the beach, but it's it has been stone on the beach on and off a little bit. And uh but it's dumping just like five hundred foot elevation and there's from there up there's tons of snow. Yeah. I'm at seven fifty myself, but I'm kind of getting Yeah, it's beautiful. I love I love it. I love winter and all that other stuff. I'm gonna go to the shop today. Put a new display yesterday.

Um featuring our good friend Laurie Joe Hamilton, who we definitely need to get on the podcast because she's so wonderful. But she's also a little computer clunky, so I'm not sure how. I don't think she has a computer, so that's gonna be problematic. I probably have to go to her house or something. But um, you know we have that nest from the Olympic Project,

right, the nest replica. Yeah, so since they made the replica of the nest, and I have a cool display about the nests and you know, showing pictures of the stones that were beaning together and all that stuff. I took one of the walls in that little cubby area and I'm devoting it to Laurie Laurie's work because if people out there don't know who Lorie Joe Hamilton is, um, she's a fantastic researcher and she's she's a long term

witness. She saw a sasquatch when she's like maybe seven or something and kept seeing the same sasquatch for fifty plus years, which is interesting. Bobo yeah yeah, and she named it Bobo. Um, not after our friend Bobo here on the podcast, of course, but after that gorilla that was in that it was like in a mall or something. It was in Seattle or Olympia Tacoma, somewhere in there. Yeah, then it was named Bobo.

So yeah, and so when she first saw the sasquatch, she just thought it was the gorilla because it looked like it, and so she's called it Bobo. But anyway, the reason she's getting a whole panel display in the museum, of course, is because she walks her dog pretty much every day. She's out in the woods walking around. Just heard her dog, Marley. Here's a shout out to Marley, by the way, lovely brow. She's out with Marley every day pretty much in the woods, and every once

in a while she runs across sasquatch prints. And she's got a really good eye because some of those prints that she's pulled, they're hard to see. But if you have eyes to see and you're around casts all the time, you can see clearly, oh yeah, that's a sasquatch print. That's amazing.

But she sees these things in the ground. And she has been pulling footprint casts from the area of the Olympic Project nest site since twenty fifteen, and now the Olympic Project had no idea she was in the area, and she's she's not on the private land, mind you, But she's like a couple of miles in every direction around the private land that the Olympic Project has access to, and she's been pulling footprints out of there since twenty fifteen,

and they seem to be the same animals that are still there. Now she's even pulled juvenile footprint and cass out of the area. So the big question is what does that imply for the Olympic Project nests, Like what kind of social behavior are we seeing? And of course that's an open book. It's an open question. At this point. We don't know that, but it sure is neat to ask that question. And now she of course knows the Olympic Project guys, and she still doesn't know where the nest site is,

by the way, she don't She still doesn't know. She obviously knows kind of where it is because that's where she's pulling the cass, but for the most part, you know, she's pretty oblivious to the whole thing, and so it's pretty neat. It's so supporting evidence is really the theme of her display. And I just put that up in the museum this week, and of course we put up a new display cabinet last week. So there's a lot of new things going on at the museum. If only it would stop

snowing so people can come see it. So that's that's that's what's up with me? Bops. What's what's up with you? Why are you so tired today? Oh? Last night someone got into a high high speed chase with the cops. Drove out to the beach out here and was driving to the sand dunes, driving up down the beach, and then drove up in the town and build their car right around here, and they're running around the neighborhood and client fences and they caught them right in front of my house. Oh

good, Sue had police activity all night. Yeah. Well it is humble, man, it's a shady place where you live sometimes. Oh, for sure, it's beautiful. A lot of substance abuse, that's for sure. Yeah. Yeah, I mean I remember every Obviously Humboldt's famous for like for weed essentially, but there's a lot of other shady stuff going on there too, man. There's like tweakers and weirdos and heroin probably, and I don't know, it's a shady spot, man. People go there to kind of

disappear. They even like abandoned their names and take weird shady names like Bobo. Yeah. Yeah, a lot of that Murder of Mountain and those other documentaries about what's going on with the collapse of the legal marijuana market and just the collapse of the marijuana market, like just top to bottom. It's kind of like West Virginia when the coal mines closed, like math came in and there's a lot more crime. And Humblet's pretty much always been the Wild West.

Oh yeah, it's never not been and it still is. Well, you know, there's a price you pay for living anywhere. I suppose you know, And you have a beach house in Humboldt, you know. And I love how people probably conjured this amazing mansion that you live in the ramshackles like sloopy thing that is being eaten by the sand dunes. That you actually do live in. That's a shack. It's a total shack. But like you probably ought not to live anywhere else. It just fits you like a

glove. Yeah, you've been there a long time too, yeah, going on almost twenty years. Oh my god, oh my gosh. Well very go So I'm sorry you're tired, but hopefully our guest today it's going to perk you up a little bit. Yeah, it's gonna be a good one. And I haven't heard the story. You haven't heard the story. Matt Prude, our producer, is the only person who has heard what's up with this gentleman? He reached out and said, yeah, I've got an I got a story to tell. Matt talked to him and he said, oh,

this guy's gonna be great for the podcast and invited him on. So I don't know much about him. I don't know much about the gentleman in general. I don't know what's in store for us. So I can't prep the audience or you bobo, but why don't we jump in? So yeah, what I do know about this gentleman is his name is Greg Stanko, and he is an amateur lepidopters, which is a butterfly and moth nerd essentially. So that's what I know about him. And he probably ran into his

ask watch at some point. So Greg, are you there? I sure am. How are you guys doing good? How are you doing great? Great? Thanks so much for joining us and whatnot. So how did it come about that we're talking to you right now before we find out who you are, Like, how did you How did you end up here on Bigfoot and Beyond with Cliff and Bobo? Yeah? Sure, So you know we all had coronavirus, you know that we all went through. So I really kind of dive into a lot of nature podcasts and stuff, and so I

stumbled upon you your podcast, and I got instantly hooked. And I listened to oh about fifteen of them, and then I said, boy, you know what, I really need to reach out to these guys because I got a pretty interesting story that I think that they're going to find interesting and it might shed a little bit of light on possibly different you know, different activities,

different feeding forms, migration, who knows. But you know, I figured, you know, you guys have a great podcast, and I love that it's scientifically based, and I just thought, you know, let me reach out and share my story with you guys and see what you think. Well, I'm glad you got hooked on the podcast. Was it the content or was it the charming personalities of the hosts? Oh, I'd have to say both, don't you think Probably? I would probably hang up on you

if he didn't. Yeah, neither, right. I always enjoyed both bose insanity that happens to him on a regular basis. He reminds me a lot

of my brother. I mean, it's crazy, the strange stuff that happens to you, right, Yeah, yeah, my brother just went to Australia and we actually had a the whole family had like a bingo game that you know, like every tragedy or ill fallen thing that somebody that could happen to him, we put a little mark in a spot, you know, like catch yourself on fire, gets stolen, venomous snakes, you know, you

name it. Well, you know, maybe for one of these uh, maybe for if we have a little time, or maybe at the member section thing, you can we can do that same sort of thing. You can tell us one story about your brother and then Bobo will tell us his story about the exact same thing that inevitably probably happened to him at some point in his life. Oh yeah, no doubt, no doubt. Brown Recluse Fighters, you name it. Look at MC battle something like that. Yeah,

yeah, it's a it's an outragedy each other battle. We can give that a shot after a little one. Once we learttle bit more about what's going on here. So, so, Greg, I introduce you as an amateur lepidopterist, But do you want to tell us what you do for a living? And you absolutely do not have to. Yeah, sure. So I went to college for biology and my field of study was entomology specifically, and you know, it's sort of like a family hobby. You know, it

runs in the genes. My brother, who is currently a scientist out in Montana and I we have just spent our whole lives with a huge passion for insects and specifically lepidoptera, butterflies and moths. So my field of work took

me in a different direction, completely not related to the sciences. But I do maintain relationships with several renowned institutions in the East as well as a couple on the West coast, and we sort of are in the process now of developing our own museum of American love Adoptera, and the goal with that is to eventually you have a place where everybody can come and see every species of butterfly and moth in the country and then kind of take you on a world

tour. So with that sort of hobby and that sort of work. You know, I'm forty two years old and we've spent our entire lives in the woods, in the wilderness studying these things. We've traveled all across the country, all across the Caribbean, you name it. Like I said, my brother was just in Australia, So I mean we take it very very seriously. We have very highly documented scientific collections and have been published multiple times because

of our field work. So we are no stranger to the wilderness and you know the wildlife and ecology that surrounds you know, everything from the east to the west coast. And you've discovered a species or two of butterfly or moth, is that correct? Yeah, we did, and we're currently in the process of getting one DNA sequenced at the moment, so we have hopeful, we have hopes for that. And it's a pretty interesting moth. You know. It just goes to show that you never know what you're going to find

out there. I mean, this thing is probably about an inch and a half and you know, like fluorescent orange and it was flying during the day in a you know, in a field outside of Butte, Montana. You

know, something that should have been discovered but just was never discovered. And it's always like the you know, slim chance that here you are in the right time, in the right place, and you're going to come across something that nobody's ever found before, or you know, you could prove the existence of an undescribed, unknown species that did you see this sub fly flitting about Andy, so what is that? And then manage to catch it? Or

Yeah. We were on a collecting trip last year in um Montana and we went all over Montana and we went up to Glacier and then back down towards Butte, Montana and west of Butte there's some great forest. I mean that, you know, like the whole state just covered with National Forest and all that. So we were in a riparian environment and it's sort of I'm sure you guys are familiar with what a camas field is, Yeah, chemist late, it's a it's a plant they eat the root. Yeah, swampy sort

of plate thing. In the springtime, it just blooms with all those beautiful purple camus flowers. Well, I was soaking wet in the middle of that field, chasing a bunch of stuff that we had been collecting all day and this moth just kind of appeared out of nowhere, and it was going from flying during the day, and it was going from one camus flower to the next, and I just thought, huh, that looks very bizarre, and I elected it. It's a good thing we collected it, because that's the

one that turned out to be as of right now unknown. Very cool. So it's your own little version, your own version of cryptozoology, I guess, because that's exactly what it is, discovering new species. Is that the only time that such an amazing event like that has happened. Have you discovered other species of moths or butterflies? Yeah? I discovered one in Idaho in

nineteen ninety eight, again with my brother. We went on a collecting trip out to the Sawteeth National Forest and we are both freshly graduated from high school, eighteen years old. You know, out there in the middle of a field with a generator and a four hundred watt mercury vapor light in the middle of nowhere, And that's basically how you collect these things. And you have

like a white sheet that you hang between the trees at night. You set up this mercury vapor light and it just attracts everything you know to your light that's probably within a up to a half mile radius. And again, you know the same situation. You're out there and you're just like, wait, this looks this is just something odd, looks. This looks very different,

very weird. And so I ended up collecting it and we determined in like nineteen ninety nine that that was an undescribed species as well, and I donated it to a museum at the time. And you get the name these things, right, Well, you kind of don't get to name them, but you're all it depends. You know, you could offer a suggestion of a name, you don't get the name because you're not the person who wrote the

journal article. Well, I I left that to the in that in that case, I left it to the museum to go ahead and name the specimen. But yeah, you you the genus of course is already described. So whatever genus that moll would or a butterfly or insect or whatever falls into. How many are found? Are you? How many do you guys find a year like or they in North America? How many species would you say?

Well, hardly any I mean it, I mean in the scientific community, it's not common to find new species of macro Lepidoptera, which is anything that's let's let's just say, you know, for conversations sake, that that would be anything over like a half an inch right in wingspan. So it's it's it's pretty you have to be pretty devoted and pretty um focused on trying to find something new because it's not a it's not an event that commonly happens.

But by any chance, were you doing this sort of activity when you had the encounter with the potential sasquatch? You bet, I was. Well, let's get into that then. Let once you set up the board for us and tell us what you're doing and where you were as much as you feel comfortable sharing. Um. I don't know if if like if butterfly spots are like fishing spots where you don't want to give give it away or something,

but um, yeah, set us up. Where were you, what were you doing, who were you with, tell us the story, and then tell us what happened. I'm interested in hearing what impressed Matt Pruit so much that we had to be on the air. Yeah. Absolutely. So The

date was September thirteenth, two thousand and six. I know that for a fact because it was my birthday, squatty birthday, so that that time of year in August in September in the northeastern United States, possibly in the West too, I'm not sure, but because there's only a couple species of this one family of moth that I was specifically looking for, and the genus of the moth is Catacola, and these Catacola mods or underwing moths, are these

large, swift flying, extremely colorful noctuid mods, and they're about three and a half inches anywhere anywhere from about two to three and a half inches. There are a common genus here in Ohio where I'm located. And the trick to these mods is that they're not always commonly attracted to light, so it doesn't always benefit you to try to set up a light trap in order to collect them. You will get some, but the preferred method of collecting them

is a process called sugaring. Now, what you do with sugaring for moths is you take a concoction and every you know, every lepidopter is kind of does it a little bit different. But I was taught by my grandfather that the best way to do it is to have rum, brown sugar, bananas, molasses and beer couple for the moths and then one for yourself. You know, yeah, it's gonna say like after you're done drinking all that,

then what do you do? So you kind of mix, you mix all that together and it forms like this really thick, syrupy, super super sweet alcoholic mixture which also you know, I mean the beer and the rum makes it very potent smelling. And you take that mixture and you get a paint brush and you go in the woods and you paint the trunks of trees.

So you'll put like a twelve by six in strip of this goop on the trunks of deciduous trees, and you know, you kind of wait a little bit and then you know, once like the you know, evening breeze or whatever, you know, like there's a little bit of wind in the air, you know, it kind of just makes that scent travel and these mods

are attracted to that mixture on the trunks of trees. So you know, you can go back like a half an hour later, like after you set up the set up the tree trunk, go back with a head lamp and you kind of like check you know what's what's there, and you could get ten fifteen of these huge mods sitting on the trunks of trees. So I do that in August and September, and I always it's called baiting, and I always kind of like bait this one chunk of acreage on my property.

I have a one hundred and forty acres of like extremely forested property here your old growth forest too, sort of by the Columbiana County border, like so we're like in Mahon and Columbiana County, just so you could have like a geographical bearing there. Yeah, of course Columbiana County. Yes, I believe that's the same county that the Ohio How was recorded in back in ninety four.

Whenever Moneymaker got that, I think, yeah, it was. It definitely was, because that was one of the things that freaked me out about what happened to me after when I was doing this process. Well anyway, so like you got any paint these trees, and you know, you could kind of leave the mixture up there for a couple of days, it doesn't it's absolutely like the word, the more it ferments, the better it gets.

So I started collecting really like the second week of September in this case, and I put out a fresh batch and you know, i'd go out there and weather permitting, you know, I checked the check the traps and see what I can get. And essentially, you know, like the mods land on the tree, they drink the mixture, they get drunk. So all you do is you go up with a collecting net and you just kind of like PLoP them in there. And you know, they're really easy to

collect that way. So I've been noticing that we had prime weather conditions and warm nights and the wind was, you know, great because you want a little bit of wind to spread that scent around. And I'm not getting any months, you know, I mean, it's just something that doesn't happen. It should happen. So I noticed that, you know, they're they're just not there. And September thirteenth rolls around. Like I said, it was

my birthday. Now, mind you, we didn't I didn't do anything for my birthday, so we didn't like, there was no drinking, you know, we didn't go out partying or anything like that, just kind of sit staying at home and watching television. I got all the windows in the house open, and I heard the the coyotes going off, you know, which I just love the sound of the coyotes. I just I think it's eerie and creepy and just cool. So I stepped outside my front door to go

listen to the coyotes. And I walked out there and I said, I stopped dead in my tracks. And I'm like, what the heck is that? It was not a coyote sound like at all? It was it was this insane, intense howling, you know, like exactly exactly like that famous Columbiana call. And I mean, I would try to reproduce it for you, but I don't. I don't think I could even do it accurately. But I mean I stepped back and I was like, holy crap, what the heck is that? You know? Stopped me dead in my tracks?

Every every hair on my arm stood up, the hairs on my back, the back of my neck stood up. I mean, it was it was quite daunting. What the heck could that possibly be? So then I'm standing out there and I'm trying to figure it out a little bit more. Now this sound is coming from the woods, which, oh man, let's say maybe a tenth of a mile from where I'm standing so like you could walk there, you know, no problem. It's quite loud and quite jarring. Or oh yeah, it was horrifying. I mean it was. It was

horrifying. So, you know, like I knew the exact area where this was. It was coming from where I bait the mods, where I would go to you know, collect them. I would walk down there and go collect them at night. And this is at two thirty in the morning, you know, give or take, you know, twenty minutes or whatever.

And so then I'm standing outside and I'm hear this thing. How over there in the woods where I always go, and then across the way and closer to me, so like if you stuck your right hand out straight out like so like that's where the response came from. So that's that response came. And it was several whoops and then a howl as well, And I said, what the heck is this? You know? Of course, like I don't even know. I'm not educated about bigfoot. I I'm not at this

point in time. I just don't have the knowledge of what people have experienced in the field, you know, during these encounters. So bigfoot wasn't wasn't on the list. Of candidates. At this point, It's just like, what the hell is that noise? Yeah, it was like, what the hell is that noise? You know? And I'm like, well, I know it's not a red fox. I know it's not an owl. I know it's not a screech owl. I mean, I'm a you know, I mean, I'm a biologist. You know, you know the sounds that

are in nature. You're familiar with that, you know, I mean, especially if you've been in wilderness locations, You're familiar with what you could come across. Stay tuned for more Bigfoot and Beyond with Cliff and Bobo will be right back after these messages. So then I'm still standing out there and then this weird experience is happening. And then at the site where the moth bait is, I heard like somebody picked up a baseball batman and just whack whack,

whack whack on the tree trunks and it was five consecutive knocks. And the other one across from me then responded again with Knox and it was a I mean, it was wild. So this back and forth communication went on for about an hour, and at this point, I'm like, you know what this could this be a big foot? You know? So, so that actually crossed that crossed your mind while this was happening, It did, It crossed my my mind about twenty minutes into it, like after I kind

of like decided, I have no idea what this was. I mean, what animal in nature, anywhere in nature knocks? Well, what were your thoughts prior to this about sasquatches, real animals, not your biologists, your trained biologists, I imagine you know you probably thought the bigfoot thing was kind of nonsense? Or is that not true? Were you Were you in the know at that time or not? No? No, I never actually thought that it was nonsense. And it's sort of like I didn't seem like I

always give credit to you know, there has to be something there. There's just too much evidence. There's too many people that have seen this. I mean, this has been going on for years and years and hundreds of years, you know. I mean people have been reporting some sort of you know, simian creature in forests, you know, all throughout the United States,

you know, Russia, all of that. I mean, so I did know a little bit about it, but I was not like an avid follower of what it could be Were you aware that sasquatches were in a high of course, I've heard of the Ohio grassman tails, you know, and that's not too far from here, you know, I mean, like where I'm at, you know, you kind of just head south and you're in rural country, you know. I mean, we have a pretty big acreage here,

you know, there's enough for us for something to travel through. I mean, I've had black bear sightings here, which they're not supposed to be. Oh yeah, sure, Columbiana County has a ton of stuff, as I We all know that now, and certainly I'm positive you've done some reading about the subject since this event. I was wondering at the time. Yeah, because Beaver Creek State Park. I've heard them down there, and I

barely ever go to Ohio. Yeah, that's that's not too far. I mean, that's that's probably about fifteen to twenty minutes from from my location. So at this point, you're hearing them knock, You're hearing them call back and forth, and you're and finally you said of like, oh my god, is this a sasquatch? Are these sasquatches that I'm listening to right now? Yeah, that's what I thought. That's literally what I thought at that point. And you have to under stand these woods, Okay, these are

not easily travelable woods. You can't. I mean, I go in there because I'm familiar with the woods. I mean, these woods are swampy, they're they're they're dirty, they're muddy. I mean, they're old. You know, they're not there's no trails, you know, even when you go like on game trails and stuff like that. I mean, they're just they're they're really really difficult to navigate. And why would you want to. I mean, the insects, you know, because it's swamp. I mean,

we have a lot of swamp here. I mean, the mosquitoes are horrendous. It wouldn't have made sense that someone a human was in two different locations in this area. It just could not have been possible. Let alone, they would have had to have gone through, like have access to my driveway

in order to park their cars hop in there and you know go. And also geographically, you know, there's a river that separates you know, the areas from where I heard them to you know, like, no humans going to be able to cross this river at three o'clock in the morning, I mean, it just would not it would just not make any sense to do that, you know, So I couldn't wrap my mind around, like what

could this have been? And I remember that night after this happened, I like instantly hopped on my computer and I'm like researching and all that stuff, and I put it on Facebook because I wanted to document it in real time, right, you know, I wanted you know, and I just said, you guys might not think I'm crazy, but here's what happened to me. And the strange thing too, is I got a call the next day from my friend Mary Ellen. Now this girl she doesn't live too far away

from me, and she lives in the in the country as well. And I mean this this girl is a hardcore. I mean she's she's a hardcore girl. You know, she's a bartender in a country bar. I mean, she's like she's you don't mess with her, you know. I mean, she's this beautiful girl. She looks like Anna Nicole Smith, right, you know, just but she'll she'll she'll kick the crap out of anybody. She was driving home, like I think it was twenty four hours later.

Forty eight hours later, she was driving home from her bar shift and she got a flat tire, and she had a flashlight in her car, and she wasn't too far from her house and she was going to wake her boyfriend up to you know, come like, hey, come, let's get the tire change on the car. You know. It's like three o'clock in the

morning again something like that. So she goes and she's walking up the street towards her house, down this like kind of like gravelly country road, and she's got a flashlight and she saw someone walking on the side of the street, you know, and she was like, who is that, Like, who's going to be walking down the side of the street at three o'clock in

the morning. And so she goes and you know, now this person like jumps in the field, you know, a little bit, and now they're running through the field and she shines her light on what she thought was a person, and you know, sure enough, she said, I swear to God that it was the Bigfoot. You know, she called and she told me about it, because you know, I just posted that on social you know, like, yeah, I don't know, it was either twenty four

or forty eight hours earlier, and I mean, like this isn't the kind of girl that's going to make something up, you know. I mean, she was just freaked out by it. She needed to talk to somebody, and she didn't know who to talk to me, So she called me and she told me about it. So I thought that that was pretty interesting that

pass. You know, they were migrating in that direction. Well let me let me let me ask this because you might have said this, but just just just to clarify, how far apart in time and space did these two events happen? Okay, so the time, the time would have been either twenty four or forty eight hours later, okay, from from my experience. And when we're talking about distance, Okay, so like as the crow flies,

let's let's call it. Let's call it two and a half miles, like close enough where it could have possibly been the same animal that just traveled over you know, that that bit of space there. And I mean, I have every reason to believe her she would not. For what reason would she make it up? You know? I mean, it just wouldn't make any sense that you would do that. Well yeah, yeah, And I think the vast majority of people who share their sasquash stories aren't lying or I

mean, they might be mistaken, but I don't think. I just don't think most people are liars like like that. You know, I think you have to have a pretty dis I mean, I mind you, I'm a kind of a pessimistic someone that comes to the human species, but you have to have an even more dismal perspective on humans to think that everybody out there

is lying about this. Sure, sure, absolutely well. The interesting thing was, you know, like after I had this experience, I mean, I was hesitant to go back in those woods, you know, but I knew that I had to go there, and um, I called my uncle up and I say, hey, come on, we're gonna go look at

in these woods and see, you know what we could find. And the interesting thing about it was that it looked as if, and what I think was happening was that these creatures were possibly eating those mods, feeding off of those mods that were on the trunks of those trees. I mean, why not i'd that before? Really? Yeah, yeah, I mean I think that that's that had to I mean, because these are these are a large fatty insect that are that are you know right there, Just so you lock

it right, off. You know, I assume that the primate would have to have pretty good nocturnal vision if it's so often active at night, So why why not? Why couldn't it? And plus it, you know, the smell rotting fruit, you know, I mean, it attracts a lot of a lot of animals, you know. And it even looked like some of the bark on the trees was like disturbed, you know, like chipped and and you know it could have been peeling away maple bark that was covered

in sugar. Yeah, that's what I That was my first go too. I mean, sure they might be eating the moths, but you actually found physical evidence of them tearing some of the bark away though. Yeah, yeah, definitely that's what I thought. You know, at the time, I was like, well, you know, I'm very familiar with these trees. I've painted the same trees for years. You do the same ones because you want to thick tree that you could recognize in the dark, you know what

I mean. So you're gonna like, I have my own game trail that I made through the woods, and yeah, you know, I mean at the time, I wish I would have thought about it. I wish I would have thought a little bit clearly more about Hey, look, let me see if I could sample this or look for some sort of you know, hair follical or you know, any sort of evidence that I could have saved.

But it just wasn't. I think that it's way more mainstream now, Like I mean, I would immediately think to do something like that, you know, if I ever came across something that I couldn't rationalize. But well, you know, your story reminds me of two other things I've heard or

seen myself. Actually in one case, one of them is I think, God, I think Dennis full who has been a guest on the program here, I think he's the one who told me about a situation in Colorado, a long term witness situation in Colorado, and a lot of footprint cast, like dozens of footprint casts came out of this event. By the way, this situation in what Dennis's shared. We gotta get Dennis back on the program

to talk about this one too sometime, I think. But I guess the first time that the family who lived at this location saw the Sasquatch, it was the little girl. I want she's about six or something. I don't know. My numbers are going to be fuzzy because it's Dennis's situation and he just told me about it, you know, a decade ago or something. But from what I recall, a young girl, probably around six or something, came around the corner on some trail on the property and came basically face

with a sasquatch. But what it was doing is that there was a log pile at this particular place in the trail, and of course she didn't see

it. There's some turn in the trail or something that prohibited her from saying the animal before she was upon it practically, But when she came around the corner, she was pretty much face to face with a sasquatch, and there was a log like a tree trunk sticking out of this log pile, you know, and there was sap on the end of the log where it had been cut, and the sasquatch was licking the sap off of the tree.

I don't know what kind of tree that would be really interesting and valuable information to have, but the sasqua which is apparently licking the sap as it was oozing out of the tree, which makes a lot of sense. I think it loves high sugar content for a lot of these trees and their sap and whatever. And then of course she they came face to face and they both got scared and they both ran opposite directions. Very Frankenstein like moment, you

know. But another situation, and Bobo was there for this one. But we'd remember doing the Finding Bigfoot episode in The Cat's Skills at the location of the New York baby footage. Yeah, it was. It was sloppy and

rainy. It was a torrential downpour. And what did we find, Like, we got knox, of course, we got knox at nights and when we follow the Knox into the tree line, and what we found and this isn't directly you know, moths or butterfly related, of course, but hundreds and I mean I dare say thousands of earthworms that had basically been drowned under you know how earthworms like when it rains really hard in the ground becomes saturated, they come to the surface in desperate need of oxygen, you know,

because they're drowning underground there. And there were literally thousands. I think I don't think I think, I don't think I'm exaggerating at all. Thousands of earthworms headed surfaced, and that's in the exact area where we're getting the knocks from. So I think it's a very safe bet that insects are on the menu for sasquatches. So moths, why not. I mean, moths are probably like bond bonds or beautiful little candies for them, you know, little

packets of calories. In my behind the scenes right up in my cliffs notes, if you will, for that episode, I actually did some calculations about how many calories would be available per square foot or yard or something, and it was it was considerable. You know, assuming sasquatches need about five thousand calories a day or so, which seems like a pretty safe number. I think, um, they could easily get that and just then a couple hours

of foraging just from earthworms if they're not looking for a balanced diet. So remember that up I was at lake up their Mono lake. Yeah, the Mono Lake footage. Oh yeah, Mono Lake footage, which is really interesting. You want to go you want to talk more about that bobo. Well it was it was termise that was a termis or moss no no, um in that case, Uh, what was happening is that Mono Lake is a kind of a brackish, salty sort of place, and the shorelines swarm with

brine shrimp and fly and flies too. That's right. Yeah, I was there collecting, actually in Mono Lake. Yeah. Did you know there was a sasquat a piece of sasquat' footage from that lake. I was not aware of it at the time, but I found out about it when I came back because I was obsessed with Mono Lake. I just thought it was one

of the most beautiful places I've ever been. And I did end up finding it after I was there, and I was I was kind of glad that I found it after we were there, you know, because we were in the again, you know, on the other side of Mono Lake, in the National forest over there, you know, middle of nowhere, you know, setting up in the dark all night long collecting, you know, and uh yeah, I mean it was an incredible place. Wee. One more

thing about you know, the moths on the trees too. You know, grizzly bears and black bears have been known to forage for hibernating moths and I and that happens in your neck of the woods. A lot too. I

mean they're they're just a high source of fat in protein. What do they gather up like a like a little flock or something that when they hybernate, they'll go like a rocky mountain side and they'll just start like flipping over rocks, you know, and they'll look for the moths that are hibernating there. And that family and mods would be the same family that I was attempting to

collect here, you know, you know, not the same genus. But you know, when we say family, I'm referring to the family noctuity. And they are a fatty, little plump moth, you know, kind of like your common chubby moth that would come to you know, any light, any pat do you light that you see are like a garden pest, you know, those sorts of mods. So they got a real robust body on

them. And those the bears they do, they scavenge for them, They look for them, and they sit there and they eat the moths on the you know, wherever they can find them, wherever they're hibernating. App makes sense. I just did a brief search here. Moth larvas or larvae provide about two hundred and sixty five calories per one hundred grams. They are sixty three percent protein and fifteen percent fat with only about four percent water. Program

These are good if you want to get into bodybuilding on a budget. Oh there you go, there you go. All right, it's gonna stop. I'm gonna stop any working out right now and just go eat moths and see what I can do. But yeah, for verse sasquatch, that totally makes sense. I think that a lot of times humans. It's another human predicament where we like this or that and don't realize there's a whole lot of in between. M Yeah, sasquatches eat deer. Yes, squatches go after fish

or whatever. They go after anything, and all insects would be on the menu, I think, including like the bigger critters that aren't insects necessarily, like scorpions and whatnot, but still are creepy. Crawley's anything is on the menu for a sasquatch when you're that big. I think, stay tuned for more Bigfoot and Beyond with Cliff and Bogo will be right back after these messages. There was one more part that I wanted to tell you you guys too,

of what happened with the encounter. The next day, I had, of course, some people that just didn't believe me. They like absolutely didn't believe me. And there was a couple, guy and a girl that I worked with at the time, and they're like, oh, come on, that didn't happen. I said, listen, come over tonight. Let's see if it happens again. Let's see if it happens. So they came over

the very next night, and it was just about twilight. They didn't have a lot of time, you know, just about twilight dusk, you know, dusk time. It was probably i want to say, like maybe eight o'clock ish at that point. And sure enough, that howl happened again in that same spot that was over there. They believed me at that point when they heard that, you know, and it was it was the same same howl again, you know, just something so strange you just couldn't could not

explain what it could have been. You know, what did they explain it away? As they actually believed me at that point once they heard it. They said, sasquatch. Oh yeah, they said, alive, no idea what that was. You know, like the guy was a big hunter, you know, an avid hunter and you know, has been in the woods many times, and you know, we never couldn't explain the sound. I mean, what could it be? I had, I had no idea.

I mean, it was I'm founding and I even found that Columbiana howl and I remember just like listening to it probably ten times because I was just in shock. But I mean the one that I heard was actually crisper and closer and clearer. I mean, it was just it was wild and I was I remember being shocked by seeing that it was from Columbiana County because you know, that's right here, you know, we're right there, and it's like, wow, that's that was just it was, it was. It was

really shocking to learn that. So I did you know? From that point then, you know, like I researched a lot more and kind of got into it. Now, my guard's always up whenever I go around looking, you know, try to see if it'll happen again. But they haven't been back since well that you know of to be fair well right correct, that I know of exactly if you have, if you have one hundred acres,

they've probably been back. He just don't know that. Yeah, I mean you know, and it's a good waterway, you know, like the forest surrounds the waterway that goes through there too, so you know, there's fish, there's all that, you know, and it's good. It's sort of

like a good avenue to secretly travel. Seriously, I mean to like either you know central you know, central Ohio or you know even you know, if you take a look on a map, you know, and you could see there's a lot of forested area and that part of the world, you know, why not, well, you know, for the sake of our listeners right now, and we have permission from Moneymaker, by the way, to do this, because Matt is the guy that recorded the Ohio Hew Mats

sage, we can use it in any way that we want it as long as you know, he's totally to retain the rights to it, which of course Matt does. But why don't we uh prove why don't we on the final episode? Why don't we put the call in at this point so some of our listeners who may not have heard the Ohio heal can kind of wrap their ears around what Greg actually heard. Yeah, so, um, how did both of these encounters end? I mean, um, you're there listening

one night or the next with your friends. Um, you just stayed up until dawn or something or night that it happened. I stayed up as long as it was happening. And I mean I we didn't have the good cell phones and stuff, you know back then, you know, you know, like really good iPhones that you would be able to go out there and like try to record something. You know. I don't have any of that equipment.

I just stayed up. I think I ended up going about at like five thirty or six o'clock in the morning, like once I was done researching, Like what the heck am I hearing here? You know? But I mean it lasted. It lasted for a good hour plus, you know, maybe an hour twenty minutes. You know, this banter, these knocks, this communication, these whooping sounds. Were the sounds going off into the distance at any point or do they just stay in the same general zone. I

feel like they were communicating to each other. I think that they were just there. They were sort of like stationary, like they didn't they did. It didn't fade away, It didn't like taper off into the distance. They were like having I mean, for lack of a better term, I don't know, some sort of communication. Sure, And the next night that was the same thing. Yeah, And then well the next day it only happened

once. The how only happened once, and the my guests that were over, you know, they got freaked out and they stayed for about twenty more minutes and then they left. But I was vigilant. I did try to hear if you know, anything else was going to happen, and I did not. And you saw nothing else out of place when you went out to the location, except for the some of the bark had been removed from the tree. That was that you know, that that was I mean, it's

it's a it's a weedy it was. It would have been very hard to determine whether I was the one that made any of the disturbance in the forest floor versus something else. You know, I couldn't. I wouldn't because I had been traveling in there. You know. It's you know, probably going in that spot every night, you know, for a couple hours a night.

You know, over there you kind of just do like a circle, you know, like walk up, you know, see what you can get, and then take care of the specimens and then go back and check it again, like maybe in an hour or so, until it was time to like call it quits for the night. And you have continued the same behavior, like you've gone out painting the trees ever since this time as well.

Yeah, I have, I have. I don't do it as much now here, but I do it in other locations, you know, I kind of I kind of like for the sake of the moths, the populations that we do have here. You know, you don't necessarily need to always go out and collect and have multiple, multiple specimens. It's it's kind of unnecessary. So you know, you let the population regenerate itself. It's the appropriate thing to do. You don't want to overcollect in a certain area because it's

not it's not an ethical thing to do, you know. I mean, you know, once once you have a representative of the specimen, or unless somebody needs one, or you know, you get a request for one or

whatever. But do you ever just go paint trees because you want to look out this like catch and release fishing, I just want to look at the fish and I put it back, you know, not really, because if I'm going to do it, I'm gonna do it right, So like I'll hop in the car and drive out to Allegheny National Forest and do it, you know, like just for some geographic very you know, you know, to vary things up a little bit and you'll get different stuff, you know,

depending on what type of environment you're in. So you know, if I if I go out and do it now, I'm going to you know, make it a point where it's going to be worthwhile and try to get someplace new and different. But um, and and then like I like to skip a year in between painting anyway, Like I said, to let the populations and you know some some of them are are out every two years. You know, they're not out every year, so it'll kind of depend.

And then you know, weather plays a big part in it. Like this year for example, you know, beginning of September, like immediately got cold. It was just too cold, you know, so it wasn't worth doing. But I mean I've never painted the trees with sasquash sat squatch in mind. I think that would be an interesting experiment to do, you know. Yeah, it's kind of what I'm taking away from this. It is like, well, I wonder what I could paint on trees that might attract sasquatches

or their food items. And how do I I don't think where I live there be any way to differentiate what comes in from a sasquatch to a bear. You know, m Andre's probably some legal things go with them that would be probably a little bit more of a concern, like with bear. But I don't know. I mean, I've done it all over the country and never ran into a bear. Yet ran into a sasquatch, but not a bear. You know, you said that bartender woman she saw that one like

two and a half miles away. What exactly did she see? She saw it walking on two feet. It was a silhouette on the side of the road. With her flash like you know, like that she could discern that something or someone was walking towards her and then it kind of hopped over the ditch and went into the field and headed towards the woods. And she described it in exactly, you know, like the traditional like the Patterson gimlin is if that's correct. I don't I don't know if that's a correct term,

the famous the famous sasquatch video. That's what she said. It looked exactly like and it was like a dark brown, reddish fur that was covering the animal. Now mind you, I mean she didn't have she didn't have it in her sights for like ten minutes or anything like that. But she was one hundred percent convinced of what she saw and she had to put a flashlight on it. So right, yeah, I mean she saw it clear enough,

like, and I mean she was horrified. She ended up running back to her car, and she ended up calling her boyfriend to come and get her because, like I said, I mean, where she got the flat tire, it wasn't far from her from where she lived, so she didn't need to like place a phone call. She was just going to walk a hundred yards or something like that to her front door. And in that time frame that she had that experience, and I mean she was horrified. I

mean, I which I could only imagine. You know, especially you're already irritated that you're got a flat tire at three o'clock in the morning. You know, after a so so so, now that you've heard sasquatches, you realize that at least once or twice they run your property, probably a lot

more. Um your neighbors have seen one of the Has this changed anything for you about how you interact I guess with the natural environment, like when you're out in the woods, has the Have these um encounters modified your behavior in anyway? Yeah, I mean it took a long cold winter to really get over it. You know, like I said, it happened in September, and um, it was it was quite the experience, you know. I mean I go out now, I'm a lot more aware, you know,

I pay attention to things I wasn't. I mean, I'm not horrified of it now. You know, I actually kind of find find it really fascinating at this point. I don't think that it would have any kind of danger you know, towards towards you or whatever. It's sort of really made it interesting, like, Wow, this could really this is you know, this is something that's completely unexplained and it's out there. You know, I mean, when are we going to find it? You know, that's the only

thing. And yeah, I mean I guess like a lot more respect for what could be out there, you know, around the corner taking a look at you or and I would believe that they would sit there and probably observe you. I mean, curiosity wise, why not so when you're out at night with a big white sheet for example, with the vapor light and all that jazz. Um diver sit around, do knocks and calls because now you know there's something else you can attract. No, but I listen for them.

I mean, I wouldn't be like a lot of times I have to go by myself, you know, and I don't want to get into put myself into a situation that I might regret, you know, But I do make We do make a lot of loud noises anyway, you know, especially in bear country. You know, as you know, you know, it's a good idea to call for bear and let them know that you're there.

And I haven't had anything respond except for a couple of owls. But um yeah, now, I mean I think like I would, I would definitely do it if I was, you know, not completely alone out there. I go big footing Alan a fair amount, and when they're around, it can be exhilarating if that's the right word. Downright scary actually makes me a second second guess my my most of my life. Yeah, see, that's what I would be afraid of. I'm like, oh man, you know,

like I really enjoyed doing this, and I don't want to. I don't want to get freaked too freaked out by it, but yeah, I would love to do it with a group of people. I think it would be awesome. Where's a good group of people out there in Ohio? God's yeah, most of the country probably. Then. You know you were talking

about before about the big trees and old growth marked they're worth through. Runs the Ohio a big Foot conference as a BFR investigator guy for their one of the main ones he's he's has a well, he has a website about the biggest trees in Ohio. What's that one, Cliff, I think it's called Big Trees Ohio. Yeah, Teshio. Yeah. He's constantly going and looking at old growth and he's just documenting, like big old trees in Ohio. And there's some monsters out there, I'll tell you, and Mark knows where

most of them are. He documents the species, he takes measurements, he takes GPS coordinates, and I think I believe he reports the data to like whatever the Forest services out in Ohio. I don't know what the I'm not sure what the acronym would be, but I think he deals with them somehow. Yeah, he's like legit gathering data kind of dude because he loves big old trees and while he's out there, he's looking around for sasquatch stuff.

At the same time, there's an annual big Fight festival that happens in Leetonio, Ohio. Really, yeah, they started doing it. I don't know if it's been back since COVID happened. Probably I think it was. I think it happened last year. And and that's not too far from here either, but yeah, that the whole little town has like a big foot festival there. Well, I am going to be out in Ohio twice this year if you're interested in coming out once for the Ohio big Foot Conference, which

I believe is like the first week of first week of May. Yeah, let me look at my calendar real fast. And that's in south Salt Fork State Park if you want to come out and say hello there. I'm sure

the tickets are probably sold out by now, but you never know. Yeah, that's on May sixth, if you want to come out there, that Saltfork State Park, May six but the vendor area is free, so I'm not sure how far of a drive that is if you want to just come out and poke around the vendor area and say hi and see other footprint casts and other things that people are doing. That's a nice avenue for you.

And then about a month or so later, I'm gonna be up in kind of near Minerva, I guess is where it is for the small Town Monster thing. What is that one called Monster Fest? Yeah, nervous closed, my nervo is close here. Yeah, but that's gonna be a fantastic one. That's gonna be on what is it June second, twenty twenty three and

June third as well. That's a Friday and Saturday. I'll be speaking, and of course Lauren Coleman's going to be there, and Stan Gordon, a bunch of good folks, Amy Boo is going to be there, Lyle Blackburn, a lot of our good friends, Shannon LaGrow, a lot of people have been on the podcast. They're gonna be out there, the entire small Amount Small Town Monsters Folks Crew, you know, They've got a whole posse of people. They're all going to be there. So that should be a

fun job as well. So there's a couple other big Foot events happening in your neck of the woods. Yeah, you know, I realized after doing a lot of research, just how many there are. You know, it was a lot. There's a lot. Yeah, there's a lot. You had to come out and check it out. Absolutely, I'd love to. Yeah, well, I'll be there. Be sure to come out and introduce yourself and be nice to meet you. Oh yeah, it'd be great. I'd love to. I'd love to. Well, great, thank you so

much for coming on and telling the story for us. Two Ohio howls in a row, two nights in a row, local sidings in the area of an already known to be active area as well. I would encourage you to get out in the woods, man, and not that you're not in the woods now, but get out in the woods for sasquatch reasons too, because

you're the kind of person that can double dip, you know. I always say the best way to look for sasquatches is to go to the woods for another reason and then keep sasquatches on your mind, and maybe you'll run across something and if you don't, well, you're still out there for another reason. You can stop, you can have a good time. It'll be a

successful trip. You're a perfect candidate for that. I would have strongly encourage you, especially with your biological background and interest in unknown species, start gathering evidence and looking around and collecting some reports or doing something like that if you have the time and gumption, and if you don't, well, just keep Bigfoot on your brain when you're out there, but not too much, not too much, but a little bit. Just be aware. So thank you

so much, Thank you guys so much. It's been an absolute pleasure. And I do have to tell you that every time I'm out in the woods from that time on, Bigfoot's always on my brain. So how could it not be? Right? All right? Thanks Greg, I appreciate your own up and tell us your story. Thank you so much. All right, Bobo, why don't you close out the episode and we'll hang out with Greg a little bit more for our members episode that'll be released a little bit later

in the week here for our listeners. And I think we're gonna try to play that game with Greg where he tells us some ridiculous story about his brother

and then Bobo gives us some equally ridiculous story out of his archives. So we'll probably do that in the member section it should be a lot of fun and I hope if you want to become a member of big Foot and Beyond, you can either go to Bigfoot and Beyond podcast dot com and then follow the links there for membership, or go straight to patreon dot com slash Bigfoot and Beyond Podcasts and learn about it there. Thank you very much for all your support. Bobo take us out of here, all right, folks,

Thanks for tuning in and joining us once again. Thanks to Greg for coming on, and you can hear some more on the beyond big Foot and Beyond Cliff and Bobo. All right, So until next week, y'all, keep it squatchy. Thanks for listening to this week's episode of Bigfoot and Beyond. If you liked what you heard, please rate and review us on iTunes, subscribe to Bigfoot and Beyond wherever you get your podcasts, and follow us on

Facebook and Instagram at Bigfoot and Beyond podcast. You can find us on Twitter at Bigfoot Beyond That's an end in the Middle, and tweet us your thoughts and questions with the hashtag Bigfoot and Beyond.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android